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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

There is no difference between, Khamenei, Ahmadinejad, Karrubi, Khatami, Rafsanjani, and Mousavi.

There is no difference between, Khamenei, Ahmadinejad, Karrubi, Khatami, Rafsanjani, and Mousavi. In the Islamic Republic you do not become a "khodi" unless you prove yourself. Proving yourself and earning your wings means: Strict adherence to the Constitution of the Islamic Republic (Velayat-e-Fagih, etc.) and survival of the regime. It means killing people. It means raping virgins before they kill them, so that they do not enter paradise. It means treating women and religious and ethnic minorities as second class citizens. It means harassing Bahai’s and calling the spies. It means having a shameful selection process and insulting the human intelligence and calling it elections. It means human trafficking and selling Iranian women as prostitutes in Dubai. It means plundering our national wealth and purchasing nuclear technology to build a bomb. It means supporting Hamas and Hezubullah terrorist groups. It means building hospitals in Palestine and Lebanon while injured Iranians protestors are either turned back or being arrested at Iranian hospitals. It means paying Lebanese families $12,000 for their suffering, while Iranians get nothing for their suffering for the past 30 years. These are all documented facts. Wake up Iran and Iranians. Do not be fooled! This message is for those who have been fooled by Islamic Republic apologists, thinking that this regime can be reformed, or some of the candidates can institute reforms. The best of these leaders, was Khatami. During his term in office, students were brutally crushed and more newspapers were shut down than any. These guys believe that Iran is a conquered country (7th Century Arab Invasion) and that Iran and Iranians and Iran's resources are at their disposal to further the cause of Shiia Islam. Please do not fool yourselves. They do not care for Iranians. They do not care for Iran. They just want our money to accomplish their dirty deeds. They are all criminals. They have their hands soaked in the Iranian blood. They do not value Iran. They do not value Iranians. They would care less if there is addiction problem in Iran. They do not care if the is prostitution in Iran. They care less if there is 25% unemployment. They would care less if there is 30% inflation annually. Behind the scenes, they are jubilant when a Basij sniper shoots a freedom loving Neda from a roof top under their orders. Then they turn around and blame it on CIA or MEK. To them, the Iranian people do not deserve anymore than they have got. Iran is a conquered country. They are the rulers and we are the slaves. Listen to their speeches. Read their writings. All Islamic Republic leaders are connected to each other by blood ties and marriage. They are cousins, nieces, aunts and uncles to each other. So therefore, they will never turn against each other. They might attack each other verbally now and then to fool you by thinking that they are fighting for your rights. But they will never cross the family code of conduct. I do not want to be clearer than this. They are a racist bunch. You connect the dots. We need to save Iran. We need to restore Iran to its rightful place among the nations. Do not expect miracles form any of them. In the final analysis, they will not jeopardize the survival of the Islamic Republic. After 30 years of abuse, insults, hangings, torture, stoning, imprisonment, lies and lies and more lies, do you still want to believe that ANY of them care for you and our beloved Iran? Do the right thing and support the Pro-Democracy movement and continue the fight, keep it alive, and Never, Never, Never give up! till everyone of them is sent back to where they came from! also this my story in NY Daily News : I know the true nature of Iran's regime: Deemed a 'threat' to the government, I was brutalized

Sunday, June 21, 2009

That are oppressive?

Today all nations of Iran, all those most basic right of citizenship and their quest to lettuce and chips and of course are in accordance with command responsibility Khvnshan Mr. Khamenei and their lives are like with their own protest there, then this nation! But the Islamic Republic and what people are human Who Hqshan and reserved the right to live are? The Islamic Republic, if you have the right to life, if you want to work and if you want to be first class citizens sword belts, waist belts and the arms should the nation and draw blood on every pavement objecting to fold then Zadnh Dltan will do everything to do! This oppressive like that you will introduce.

Seiad Hasan Mir Kazemi

Basij commander hill Shamsabad ALHADI mosque in Tehran

Managing world metal factory in Karaj

Mr. Mir Kazemi brilliant in its involvement in suppression of Tir and of course mission province Khorramabad for beating Mustafa Taj-Zadeh Airport Khorramabad Thym Office meeting, when unity was also referred to. Myrkazmy known and prominent members of Ansar-e Hezbollah is also. Below a picture of the way you plant them a while ago that the Minister Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit about the data are also other documents that you see and makes sure criminals and how citizens Khdvm lawyer Republic province of rent of use!

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Crime Khamenei

All people the world

All people

Today in my homeland Iran is the biggest crime in human form to help us to help humanity.

This film is just a small corner of what these days is happening in Iran

The intensity of oppression continues Tmamtr

According to latest news received credible Guards Khamenei yesterday the mission found within a week of quiet to Tehran. Some of the commanders of the IRGC and the Ministry of Interior and Ministry of Information yesterday in a meeting Samareh Hashemi also represented the company that Ahmadinejad has been to the officer within one week with the intensity of what Tmamtr and repression continue with the formation of a Special Staff attended a number of IRGC commanders and senior officers and managers of the ministries of information and are attempting to bring the protests to end.
Note successful people is that the police force has until the clothes and the Corps are armed presence in cities of any safeguarding measures to avoid and to restrain protests do not. On the other hand appears that Khamenei sent Skvntsh leave that place and taken refuge in an unknown spot is safe.

Iran embassy staff secretly film British protesters taking to the streets in wake of election rigging claims

Hundreds of British protesters have been secretly filmed by staff at London's Iranian Embassy, sparking claims that authorities are trying to spread fear. Protesters have taken to the streets around the Iranian embassy in London in the wake of claims of widespread rigging during this week's elections. But several who attended last night's protest have been left fearing reprisals after their actions were secretly filmed by a camera inside the embassy building. Pictures obtained by The Evening Standard reveal a video camera on the top floor of the embassy in Prince's Gate filming the protesters. The camera is noticeable from street level and was placed high in an attic window.
News of the cameras comes as Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei today branded the British government the 'most treacherous' in the world. Iran's ambassador to Britain has been summoned to the Foreign Office where officials are expected to lodge a formal complaint about the Ayatollah's remarks. During last night's protests some protesters covered their faces because of fears they or their relatives may be targeted by the Iranian authorities following the protests. The crowds of up to 400 have been holding anti-government banners and chanting slogans against president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and wearing the green colours of opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi. Mostafa Sanatnama, one of the protest organisers, accused Iranian authorities of trying to 'spread fear'. He said: 'People think they have to be careful. Most of us still have friends and relatives in Iran. But even if they are filming us it won't scare people away. 'What can they do when there are thousands on the streets?' Maryam, a 26-year-old student, is due to fly back to Tehran in two weeks and says she was deeply troubled by the covert filming. She said: 'I'm worried they'll take my passport or won't let me get a flight back.' Sisters Michelle and Catherine Palmer, whose mother fled Iran just before the 1979 revolution, said they did not believe authorities would take retribution against Iranians in Britain. They agreed the protesters were concerned about how their actions would affect relatives at home. No one was available for comment at the Iranian Embassy last night.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Khamenei: Iran vote was ‘definitive victory’

Supreme leader defends Ahmadinejad, sternly warns against 'chaos'
Iran's supreme leader said Friday that Iran's disputed presidential vote had not been rigged, sternly warning protesters to halt massive demonstrations or be held responsible for creating chaos. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei sided with hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and offered no concessions to the opposition. He effectively closed any chance for a new vote by calling the June 12 election a "definitive victory." The speech created a stark choice for opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi and his supporters: drop their demands for a new vote or take to the streets again in blatant defiance of the man endowed with virtually limitless powers under Iran's constitution. Khamenei blamed foreign media and Western countries of trying to create a political rift and stir up chaos in Iran. "Some of our enemies in different parts of the world intended to depict this absolute victory, this definitive victory, as a doubtful victory," he said, according to an official translation on state TV's English-language channel. "It is your victory. They cannot manipulate it." Khamenei said the 11 million votes that separated Ahmadinejad from his top opponent, Mousavi, was proof that fraud did not occur. "If the difference was 100,000 or 200,000 or 1 million, one may say fraud could happen. But how can one rig 11 million votes?" Khamenei asked during Friday prayers at Tehran University. Mousavi and his supporters have staged massive street rallies in recent days that have posed the greatest challenge to the Iran's Islamic ruling system since the 1979 Islamic Revolution that brought it to power. Warning of a much harder crackdown
So far, the government has mostly allowed the protests to take place. But Khamenei opened the door for a much harder crackdown. "It must be determined at the ballot box what the people want and what they don't want, not in the streets," he said. "I call on all to put an end to this method. ... If they don't, they will be held responsible for the chaos and the consequences." Khamenei blamed Great Britain and Iran's foreign enemies for fomenting unrest and said Iran would not see a second revolution like those that transformed the countries of the former Soviet Union. He remained staunch in his defense of Ahmadinejad, who attended Friday's prayers, saying his views were closer to the president's than to those of former President Hashemi Rafsanjani, a powerful patron of Mousavi. Khamenei's address was his first since hundreds of thousands of Mousavi supporters flooded the streets in Tehran and elsewhere in the country in rallies evoking the revolution that ended Iran's U.S.-backed monarchy. On Thursday, supporters dressed in black and green flooded downtown Tehran in a somber, candlelit show of mourning for those who have been killed in clashes since Friday's vote. Khamenei said the street protests would not have any impact. "Some may imagine that street action will create political leverage against the system and force the authorities to give in to threats. No, this is wrong," he said. Small window of legal challengeThe supreme leader left open a small window for a legal challenge to the vote. He reiterated that he has ordered the Guardian Council, an unelected body of 12 clerics and Islamic law experts close to the supreme leader, to investigate voter fraud claims. The Council has said it was prepared to conduct a limited recount of ballots at sites where candidates claim irregularities. He stressed that the four candidates were part of the country's Islamic system reminded listeners that Mousavi was prime minister of Iran when Khamenei was president in the 1980s. "All of them belong to the system. It was a competition within the ruling system," he said. So far, protesters have focused on the results of the balloting rather than challenging the Islamic system of government. But a shift in anger toward Iran's non-elected theocracy could result in a showdown over the foundation of Iran's system of rule. Ahmadinejad has appeared to take the growing opposition more seriously in recent days, backtracking Thursday on his dismissal of the protesters as "dust" and sore losers. The crowds in Tehran and elsewhere have been able to organize despite a government clampdown on the Internet and cell phones. The government has blocked certain Web sites, such as BBC Farsi, Facebook, Twitter and several pro-Mousavi sites that are vital conduits for Iranians to tell the world about protests and violence. Text messaging, which is a primary source of spreading information in Tehran, has not been working since last week, and cell phone service in Tehran is frequently down. The government also has barred foreign news organizations from reporting on Tehran's streets.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Ahmadinejad opponents shout protests from rooftops

The letter, posted on Mousavi's Web site that is accessible outside Iran, didn't specify his allegations but claimed that his envoys were unfairly blocked from monitoring polling stations. Iran does not allow outside or independent election observers. The Guardian Council must certify all election counts.Mousavi later met Khamenei -- who has almost limitless power -- to press his appeal, said Shahab Tabatabaei, a prominent activist in Mousavi's pro-reform camp.It was likely a long-shot mission by Mousavi, 67, who served as prime minister in the 1980s. Khamenei has already given his blessing to the election outcome and it would ."Some believed they would win, and then they got angry," he said. "It has no legal credibility.
It is like the passions after a soccer match. ... The margin between my votes and the others is too much and no one can question it.""In Iran, the election was a real and free one," he told a room packed with Iranian and foreign media.But Ahmadinejad also accused international media of launching a "psychological war" against the country.
Iranian authorities have asked some foreign journalists who were in Iran to cover the elections to prepare to leave. Nabil Khatib, executive news editor for Dubai-based news network Al Arabiya, said the station's correspondent in Tehran was given a verbal order Sunday from Iranian authorities that the office will be closed for one week.
No reason was given for the order, but the station was warned several times Saturday that they need to be careful in reporting "chaos" accurately.
A sustained and growing backlash to Iran's power could complicate the country's policies at a pivotal time.President Barack Obama has offered to open dialogue after a nearly 30-year diplomatic freeze. Iran also is under growing pressure to make concessions on its nuclear program or face possible more international sanctions.On NBC television's "Meet the Press," Biden said: "Is this the result of the Iranian people's wishes? The hope is that the Iranian people, all their votes have been counted, they've been counted fairly. But look, we just don't know enough" since Friday's vote.In Paris, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said his country is "very worried" about the situation in Iran and criticized the "somewhat brutal reaction" to the election protests.